HOLTON — A Holton woman testified Thursday morning she was beaten, raped, burned and urinated on by her then-boyfriend during an attack spanning several hours.

“Are you ready to be in hell because I am the devil,” the woman said Topekan Filip Chase Rosario told her during the Dec. 19 attack in Holton.

Rosario’s preliminary hearing took place in Jackson County District Court. He has been charged with attempted capital murder, two counts of aggravated criminal sodomy, two counts of rape, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated battery and criminal threat — all felonies.

The victim said Rosario put his hands around her neck. The woman, who had dated Rosario for about three months before the attack, said she looked up and saw the blinds on her bedroom windows.

“I thought that was it,” she said. “If this is it, God, please take care of my daughter.”

The woman’s 5-year-old daughter was asleep in another bedroom of the woman’s house during the attack, the woman testified.

On the day of the attack, Rosario had dropped her off at her job in Topeka and had picked her up that evening, she testified.

“We drove to my parents’ house in Holton to pick up my daughter,” the woman said.

During the trip from Topeka to Holton, Rosario asked if she had been “sleeping around.” The woman told the court she hadn’t been having an affair.

When the woman, her daughter and Rosario arrived at her home in Holton, Rosario’s mood changed “from tense to anger, aggression,” the woman testified.

The woman testified Rosario, who was holding a kitchen knife, told her: “I know what you’ve been doing. You can’t hide from me.”

The woman went into her bedroom to change clothes and to talk to Rosario. The woman said Rosario sexually assaulted her.

The woman put her daughter to bed about 8 or 8:30 p.m. at Rosario’s direction, she said.

During the night, Rosario made the woman shower at least three times. During one of her showers, Rosario urinated on her. Another time, he helped her wash her hair.

The victim also said Rosario sexually assaulted her again, struck her, burned her chest with a “cherry” from a cigarette and made her cut herself with a box cutter.

“He said he wanted to see me in pain just like he was,” the woman said. “He told me he wanted to see my blood.”

At one point, Rosario threatened to remove her intrauterine device used for birth control. He said he would get her pregnant and then punch her so hard she would lose the baby.

Sometime after 7 a.m., the woman and Rosario took the woman’s child to school. The two then stopped for gas in Holton. The woman said Rosario had a knife with him and threatened to kill her if she tried to escape.

“He told me if I tried anything he would slit my throat and all of Holton would see my blood,” she said.

The woman said when the two were near Topeka, the car hit some ice and she turned the wheel. The car entered a ditch and the woman escaped from the car, flagging down another vehicle. The driver of the other vehicle took the woman to the Topeka Police Department. The driver and the woman didn’t exchange information, and the woman said in court Thursday she didn’t know if the driver was a man or woman.

After speaking to police, the woman was taken to an area hospital for treatment and testing.

The victim spent an hour testifying about the attack. Then, Rosario’s attorney, Ron Evans, chief of the Death Penalty Defense Unit, questioned the woman.

He asked the woman about using drugs with Rosario. She testified that on the Sunday before the attack, she had smoked PCP with him. Evans asked the woman why she didn’t try to escape, especially when the two were getting gas in Holton. The woman said escaping was always on her mind.

“I thought, ‘How am I going to survive? How am I going to get out?” the woman said. “My assumption is he would have killed me.”

Shortly before noon, Judge Michael Ireland said there was enough evidence to bind Rosario over for trial. Evans told Ireland that he and his client would stand silent and asked the court to enter a plea of “not guilty.”

Evans asked that Rosario’s $500,000 bond be reduced because of his strong ties to Shawnee County. Rosario’s mother and grandmother attended Thursday’s hearing. A hearing on the bond reduction motion has been slated for 1 p.m. April 11.